The legislation heading to the full House would expand the type of metals subject to recycling regulations in Michigan. It would create a paper trail to help police and prosecutors gather evidence on thieves.

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The bills ban cash sales of commonly stolen copper wire, catalytic converters and air conditioners and set a three-day waiting period for some purchases.

Snyder has said the legislation was a priority for his administration, but it appeared to stall earlier this year after receiving many complaints from metal recyclers who said the proposed regulations would end up punishing them along with thieves.

“As a recent victim of scrap metal theft myself, I am pleased to see these two bills move from committee with strong bipartisan support,” Tlaib said in a statement. “Scrap metal theft destroys our communities when illegal scrappers steal playground equipment from parks and schools, and abandoned homes are a greater danger when they’ve been stripped of metal.”

Rep. Klint Kesto, R-Commerce Township, said the action “gives an opportunity for prosecution of the bad actors. It gives law enforcement the opportunity to identify where those thieves are going, and which scrap yards are not acting in good faith,” MLive.com reported.

The bills, an update of those that stalled earlier, include new language protecting scrap metal recyclers from liability in the event that their electronic record keeping system malfunction or if they purchase property that they had no way of knowing was stolen.

Scrap metal yards already must make a copy of a seller’s photo identification, take their thumbprints and make them sign a statement indicating that the material is theirs to sell.

The proposal now would require them to photograph or video record all incoming material and name employees who weigh and inspect purchases. It also expands those metal items they can’t buy.

The Institute of Scrap Recycling Industries has said it is neutral on the package. Some recycling yard operators say they remain concerned that regulations designed to punish thieves and those who help them fence their stolen materials.

“Percentage-wise, it sounds like they’re trying to crack an egg with an anvil,” said Michael Bass, manager of Friedland Industries in Lansing. The company now keeps video of all incoming sales, and it helped recover brass drain plates stolen outside the Michigan Supreme Court building in 2011.